IS1060 Introduction to information systems
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how people may influence the technology choices and the way it is used.
We cannot, as it were, privilege one element and ignore the others.
For the most part in this course we will consider
formal organisations as
the ‘structure’ referred to in Leavitt’s diamond. For example, the uses of
ICT, the people and the relevant task could be within businesses, such as
a
car manufacturer, a retail store, a bank or an airline, or they could be
in public or not-for-profit bodies, such
as a government department, a
hospital, a school or a city council. In such cases the people will usually
be the workers or employees of such organisations, and their customers
or clients. But as citizens and in other parts of our lives beyond any work
setting we also use information systems –
for example as a student, when
talking to friends on Facebook or by email, or when buying products and
services over the internet. Thus in this course we will sometimes shift our
understanding of the ‘structure’ we want to consider to include society at
large, or some section of it. This is, for example,
the case when we discuss
issues such as personal privacy, data protection and rights of access to
information.
Technology remains important even if it is not the exclusive focus and we
certainly do consider it in this course. It is not possible to comprehend
how organisations build and use information
systems to serve their
needs if we do not have a good level of understanding and experience of
the technologies themselves. For this reason this course includes a part
devoted to studying contemporary technologies, and awards 25 per cent
of the final marks based on practical experience
in developing simple
information systems using standard software packages: a database and a
spreadsheet. This is explained more in Chapter 2.
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